Time and time again AOpen has
released stable, fast, and reliable motherboards. The one thing these motherboards
truly held in common, aside from the three factors just mentioned, was that they all used
Intel chipsets...quite well I might add. One of the most under-rated chipsets out
today is the SiS 5582 chipset, it is a great low-cost alternative to the Intel TX chipset,
and because of its price point and extensive feature set it is much more of a competitor
than a measly alternative. The first example of the power of a 5582 board on this
site was the Chaintech 5SIM, while the 5SIM is great motherboard it was still lacking in a
few areas...it is those areas that AOpen's first SiS 5582 motherboard, the AP58, excels
in.

"Find what the people want, and give it
to them...at a cost." The driving force behind successful businesses, Find what
the people want, and give it to them, what makes the business successful is the amendment
to that statement, "at a cost." Keep that in mind as you take a look at
the AOpen AP58.

AOpen's AT form factor AP58 places the Socket-7 IC at the
front of the motherboard (the edge closest to the front of your case) surrounded by 9
Sanyo-tantalum capacitors. Are all SiS chipsets erratic at higher bus speeds?
As long as you have some decent RAM and and quality peripherals the answer to that
question is no. AOpen proves this statement with their AP58, the Sanyo-tantalum
capacitors do account for some stability of the motherboard, however quality engineering
and research come in to play with the production of any motherboard, it is quite obvious
that AOpen did their homework with the AP58.

The motherboard is centered around the fairly
large SiS 5582 chipset which is about the size of a small processor (i.e. 386DX).
One trademark of SiS motherboards has been the green heatsink you find on almost all
motherboards that use SiS chipsets, however absent for the SiS 5582 chipset in the case of
the AP58 is this stylish heatsink. During normal and heavy operation the 5582
doesn't get hot at all, barely warm in fact, so it doesn't seem as if heat will be a
problem for users.

AOpen chose to keep a small distance between the 4 PCI
slots and the 3 ISA slots, the Award BIOS chip is found between the first PCI slot and the
last ISA slot allowing the user to fully occupy all 7 slots without worrying about any
shared slots. For the size of the motherboard, it is amazing that AOpen managed to
fit 4 SIMM and 2 DIMM slots on a baby AT form factor, nevertheless they did, and it was a
great decision to do so.

The SiS 5582 chipset natively can cache a
maximum of 128MB of RAM, a full 64MB more than the limit of the Intel TX chipset.
For you Socket-7 PhotoShop users who need 128MB of RAM you'll find that the SiS 5582
chipset gives you the most bang for your buck. Most people think that if you exceed
the maximum cacheable memory limit of your chipset/motherboard that you'll immediately
notice a decrease in speed. That is definitely not the case. Windows 95 loads
data from the "bottom-up" meaning that it loads data into the cached area of
your RAM first, then moves on to the un-cached regions, therefore if you have 128MB of RAM
installed in a TX motherboard but never use above 64MB of it you won't experience any
decrease in performance. The same is true for the AP58, if you don't use memory
above the cacheable area (in Win95...other OSes, such as Linux, load from the top down)
then you won't notice a decrease in performance...however if you're not using it...why buy
that much RAM in the first place? It probably sounds odd, but there are those who
upgrade their RAM for the sake of watching the memory counter tick up to a higher number
;)

Configuring the Award BIOS to meet the test
system's full potential is a breeze if you've had prior experience with the Chipset
Features Setup of SiS motherboards, if you haven't however, the items in the BIOS may be
quite frightening to you. Leaving the AP58 at its Turbo Defaults is more than
sufficient for normal and overclocked operation, however if you feel like experimenting
take a look at AOpen's thick user's manual. Why is the AP58's manual so big?
Well, not only does it cover the basics necessary for setting up your system but it also
documents the BIOS Settings very well. AOpen accurately documents many of the
options in the Chipset Features Setup of the Award BIOS, something overlooked by 95% of
the motherboard manufacturers selling their products today. Its nice to know that
AOpen cares.

The performance of the AP58 is a little better
than Chaintech's 5SIM, however for the most part it can be classified as being average.
What is really amazing is that the AP58 came in third place among the motherboards
reviewed here at 291MHz with the Pentium MMX in the Socket-7 Motherboard Comparison.

What's missing from the AP58? Inside
AOpen's stylish box the Bus Mastering drivers from SiS seem to be absent along with
AOpen's trademark copy of Norton Anti-Virus. It would have been nice to find the
AP58 in an ATX form factor, but in order to keep the price of the AP58 at its targeted
point the AT design was pretty much necessary.

In the user's manual only one voltage setting
is un-named, the setting is supposedly 2.1v which should be sufficient for the AMD K6/266
however I wouldn't count on it being too reliable with the K6/266 (requires a 2.2v
setting) until we can find out for sure what AOpen made the reserved setting on the AP58.
The manual states that this reserved setting is probably 2.1v, however that hasn't
been decided for sure at the time the manual was printed...it all depends on what
motherboard revision you got.

This little addition to my review layout was
put in here just so you all can have an idea of what brand of SDRAM I recommend and have
tested with the board, just to avoid problems in the future if you decide to purchase the
board.